Sports
Mahanama record ten wickets win over St. Benedict’s
Under 19 Cricket
by Reemus Fernando
Left-arm spinner Anuka Wijewardana completed a match bag of 11 wickets as Mahanama cruised to a ten wickets win with more than a session to spare in the Under 19 Division I Tier ‘A’ cricket encounter against St. Benedict’s at Bloomfield ground on Wednesday.
Mahanama added just over 40 runs to the overnight total before rattling Bens for 95 runs. Wijewardana and Chamika Heenatigala picked up four wickets each to restrict Bens to their lowest total in a tournament match this season.
Mahanama needed 13 runs for the victory and they reached the target without loosing a wicket.
Heenatigala collected a match bag of seven wickets and top scored with 65 runs.
It was Mahanama’s second outright victory of the season and the first in the tournament proper.
Meanwhile, in reply to Richmond’s massive score of 401 for six wickets declared, D.S. Senanayaka were dismissed for 287 runs. Following on they were one run for no wickets at close.
Scores:
St. Benedict’s
131 all out in 42.5 overs (Akein Perera 43, Didula Eshan 28, Trishane Silva 21n.o.; Anuka Wijewardana 7/39, Chamika Heenatigala 3/20) and 95 all out in 40 overs (Manikya Deshapriya 26, Trishane Silva 23; Anuka Wijewardana 4/28, Chamika Heenatigala 4/31)
Mahanama
171 for 6 overnight 214 all out in 58.2 overs (Dulneth Algawatte 31, Chamika Heenatigala 65, Eshan Withanage 41, Osanda Muthugama 22; Ayesh Gajanayake 2/28, Mevan Dissanayake 4/66, Samindu Peiris 3/32) and 15 for no loss in 2.3 overs
Richmond take first innings honours at Wijerama Mawatha
Scores:
Richmond
401 for 6 decl. in 88.4 overs (Nikil Jayaweera 28, Helitha Edirisinghe 99, Thamindu Pradeeptha 166, Shehan de Zoysa 60; Kiran Janendra 3/90)
DSS
32 for 1 overnight 287 all out in 91.4 overs (Bihan Gamage 32, Dehem Nirmal 36, Malitha Perera 61, Shanal Binuksha 26, Randisha Bandaranayake 81; Tenusha Nimsara 3/95, Minaga Ariyadasa 4/32) and 1 for no loss in 1 over
Latest News
South Africa’s Shabnim Ismail reverses retirement for T20 World Cup
South Africa fast bowler Shabnim Ismail has reversed her international retirement and is included in the Proteas’ squad for this summer’s T20 World Cup in England.
Ismail, 37, is one of the fastest bowlers in women’s cricket and is her country’s all-time top wicket-taker in the format despite making her last appearance more than three years ago.
She is joined in the squad by fellow opening bowler Marizanne Kapp, who has recovered from illness, while Dane van Niekerk, who has also come out of retirement in the past year, is included following a calf injury.
South Africa, who were runners-up at the past two Women’s T20 World Cups, open their campaign against Australia on 13 June before facing Pakistan, India, the Netherlands and Bangladesh.
They recently enjoyed a 4-1 series win against ODI world champions India.
“Having someone like Shabnim back adds a lot of value to the group,” said head coach Mandla Mashimbyi.
“We had good conversations and you could see the hunger she still has to represent South Africa and help this team achieve something special.”
South Africa squad:
Laura Wolvaardt (c), Tazmin Brits, Nadine de Klerk, Annerie Dercksen, Shabnim Ismail, Sinalo Jafta, Marizanne Kapp, Ayabonga Khaka, Sune Luus, Karabo Meso, Nonkululeko Mlaba, Kayla Reyneke, Tumi Sekhukhune, Chloe Tryon, Dane van Niekerk.
[BBC Sports]
Latest News
Bangladesh government asks committee to look into 2026 T20 World Cup fiasco
The Bangladesh government has formed a committee to look into the previous government’s decision to not allow the team to play its 2026 T20 World Cup matches in India, a move that led to Bangladesh being removed from the tournament in February and March.
The sports ministry made an announcement on Monday that additional secretary Dr AKM Wali Ullah will head the committee that includes chief selector Habibul Bashar, the former Bangladesh captain, and Faisal Dastagir. The trio has been asked to look into all matters related to Bangladesh not sending a team to the T20 World Cup. They will be expected to submit a report within 15 working days.
The sequence of events that culminated in Bangladesh missing the tournament began on January 3, when the BCCI directed Kolkata Knight Riders to remove Mustafizur Rahman from their IPL 2026 squad for an unspecified reason, at a time when relations between the Indian and Bangladeshi governments were strained.
In the next 24 hours, Asif Nazrul, Bangladesh’s sports adviser (minister) at the time, posted on his official Facebook account that he wanted the ICC to move Bangladesh’s T20 World Cup matches out of India and to Sri Lanka. Nazrul was an adviser in Bangladesh’s interim government that was formed in August 2024 after a student-led uprising toppled the Awami League regime.
“I have asked the BCB to explain the entire matter to the ICC,” Nazrul wrote on his official Facebook page on January 4. “The board should inform that where a Bangladeshi cricketer cannot play in India despite being contracted, the entire Bangladeshi cricket team cannot feel safe going to play in the World Cup. I have also instructed the Board to request that Bangladesh’s World Cup matches be held in Sri Lanka.”
After the BCB informed the ICC that Bangladesh would not play in India, the ICC said that was not acceptable because it felt there were no valid security concerns. The impasse continued even after an ICC delegation visited Bangladesh to discuss the issue.
On January 24, after the ICC board had met and dismissed Bangladesh’s demand to play their matches in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh were removed from the tournament and replaced by Scotland.
The day before the national elections in Bangladesh, Nazrul mad a u-turn, saying he had not made any of the decisions to withdraw Bangladesh from the T20 World Cup, and laid the responsibility on the players.
When the new government was formed, the sports minister Aminul Haque said he wanted to repair Bangladesh’s sporting relationship with India. He also said in parliament that he wanted a proper investigation into the manner in which the T20 World Cup issue had been handled by the BCB and the previous government.
[Cricinfo]
Latest News
Draw on the cards, but Mominul and Shanto extend Bangladesh’s lead
Bangladesh edged ahead of Pakistan on a day cut in half by rain and bad light, with Monimul Haque and Najmul Hossain Shanto stretching their lead to 179, with seven wickets still in hand.
With the afternoon session wiped out entirely by torrential rains, Bangladesh were solid either side of it, thanks primarily to 105-run stand between the pair, their century partnership this Test, and just the third time a pair has done so for Bangladesh.
Pakistan’s seam bowlers threatened early after removing the openers cheaply once more, but found themselves held up by the two left-handers, with a late strike from Shaheen Shah Afridi in the final session the only triumph they had to show for the rest of the day.
The lights were on almost from the outset on an overcast morning, and the first dismissal looked like the kind a seam bowler would get on a green top under the clouds.
Abbas got one to nip back in off the surface into Mahmudul Hasan Joy’s pads, right under the knee roll. With Pakistan constricting the run-scoring, they struck again through Hasan Ali, who took advantage of the variable bounce to rear one up that caught the shoulder of Shadman Islam’s bat.
The job of rebuilding fell once more to the pair primarily responsible for putting Bangladesh in this position of relative control. Mominul and Shanto merely picked up where they’d left off, settling in and taking the sting out of Pakistan’s attack. Mominul was the more cautious one while Shanto gradually picked up the scoring rate, every run appearing to tilt the match situation ever so slightly Bangladesh’s way.
In the final half hour of the session, the pair looked positively dominant and, in a repeat of the first innings, the runs in that period flowed easily. Salman Ali Agha’s spin posed a threat early on, with Mohammad Rizwan dropping a sharp chance off an outside edge, but even that threat faded soon after. In his final over before lunch, Mominul leapt down the wicket and whacked him over his head.
That the heavens opened might have been an advantage for Pakistan, in that it broke up the pair’s rhythm and made Bangladesh’s calculations about the pacing of their innings more complicated. However, nearly four hours since then previous ball, the resumption of play saw no semblance of a loss of control from either batter. Both ambled to their half-centuries unencumbered, with only Abbas’s unerring accuracy and incessant ability to squeeze movement from a placid surface occasionally discomforting them.
Shan Masood had held off turning to Noman Ali until 35 overs had gone by, presumably largely because he did not wish to bowl a fingerspinner to two left-armers.
But as soon as he was handed the ball, he demonstrated why that theory did not deserve the weight Pakistan appeared to put in it. In his first over, he got one to rear up to Mominul, who could only splice the ball to short leg, where Abdullah Fazal put down a sharp chance. He was not taken out of the attack for the remainder of the day, often exploiting the rough around the left hander’s off stump, and nearly snaring Mushfiqur Rahim when he mistimed a slog agonisingly over long-on’s head.
Bangladesh’s serene progress was only interrupted when Afridi found seam movement to bring one into Mominul, who could not get his outside edge out of the way. With some time remaining in the final session, Pakistan may have hoped to trigger a collapse, but between then and until bad light forced the end of play, Shanto and Mushfiqur ensured there was no such thing.
Brief scores:
Bangladesh 413 and 152 for 3 in 50.3 overs (Najimul Hossain Shanto 58*, Mominul Haque 56; Hasan Ali 1-23) lead Pakistan 386 in 100.3 overs (Azan Awais 103, Imam-ul-Haq 45, Abdullah Fazal 60, Salman Agha 58, Mohammad Rizwan 59; Mehidy Hasan Miraz 5-102, Taijul Islam 2-46, Taskin Ahmed 2-70) by 179 runs
[Cricinfo]
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